Aurelia POV:
I returned to my small apartment, the silence a stark contrast to the cacophony of Jacob' s rage. The air still thrummed with the echoing crash of glass. Yet, despite the violence, my heart felt strangely light, a heavy weight finally lifted. I had spoken my truth, made my stand.
The following morning, a package arrived. My heart, usually a steady drum, lurched unpleasantly. It was a thick envelope, official-looking. Inside, I found the divorce papers I had signed, now ripped into tiny, indistinguishable fragments. My signature, once a mark of closure, was now just another piece of shredded paper, mocking my resolve. Jacob's retaliation.
A cold wave of nausea washed over me, stronger than any morning sickness I'd experienced. My body began to shake, not from fear, but from a profound disgust that settled deep in my bones. This was his answer. He wouldn' t let me go. He wouldn' t let us go.
Just as I crumpled the ripped papers in my hand, my phone buzzed with an unfamiliar number. A text message. My heart pounded, a frantic bird trapped in my chest. I hesitated, then opened it.
`He's heartbroken. Really. It's almost sweet how lost he is without you. But don't worry, I'm here now.`
The message was from Kaleigh. I hadn't heard from her in weeks, not since I discovered her name on that postnup. Her return, after all this time, was a cruel twist of the knife. I remembered her casual texts from years ago, always phrased to seem innocent, yet subtly hinting at her presence in Jacob's life. "Jacob just dropped by my gallery, so sweet!" or "He helped me move this huge sculpture, so strong!" Always just a little too much, a little too intimate.
Over the past few months, as my pregnancy progressed, her social media posts had become more frequent, more ostentatious. Pictures of lavish dinners, private jet trips, exclusive events-all with Jacob subtly in the background, or his hand conspicuously placed on her arm. She was flaunting their connection, rubbing it in my face, secure in her position as his idealized love. Each post was a deliberate jab, a reminder of what I was losing, or rather, what I never truly had.
Then, another message from Kaleigh. This time, a voice note. My finger trembled as I pressed play.
Kaleigh' s voice, saccharine and soft, filled the small room. "Oh, Jacob, darling. Don't be so upset about Aurelia. She was never really you. Just a… a convenient placeholder, isn't that what you called her? Nobody understands you like I do."
A male voice, Jacob's, deep and weary, mumbled something incoherent in response.
Kaleigh giggled, a sound that grated on my nerves. "See? He knows it's true. He always comes back to me, Aurelia. Always."
My stomach churned. I squeezed my eyes shut, wishing I could unhear it. But it wasn't over.
Another text. This time, a photo. It was a selfie of Kaleigh, her head resting on Jacob' s shoulder. He was asleep, his face looking peaceful, unguarded. In the frame, his bare left hand was visible, stretched out on the plush sheets. No wedding ring. The picture was taken in a bed that looked suspiciously like mine, in our bedroom.
Beneath the photo, a caption: `Some things are just meant to be. He finally took off the ring. Took him long enough. Baby steps, right?`
The world swam. A wave of profound nausea, cold and acidic, rose from my stomach. I stumbled to the bathroom, clutching my mouth, and wretched violently into the toilet. The bile burned my throat, but it was nothing compared to the burning shame and fury that consumed me. The physical pain was a welcome distraction from the searing emotional agony.
I gazed at my reflection, my face pale, eyes bloodshot, hair disheveled. I was a ghost, a hollowed-out version of the woman I used to be. The woman who had loved Jacob Dickerson, the man who had so coldly and systematically dismantled her life.
It was all a lie. From the very beginning. His "gratitude," his "loyalty," his fabricated love – it was all a smokescreen. He hadn't married me because he loved me. He married me because I resembled Kaleigh, because I was strong enough to help him rebuild his empire, because I was fertile enough to give Kaleigh the child she couldn't have. I was a convenient echo, a living shadow, a desperate substitute.
The tears came then, hot and stinging, burning paths down my ravaged cheeks. Not for Jacob, not for the shattered dream of our marriage, but for myself. For the fool I had been, for the decade I had sacrificed, for the innocent life I now carried, a life conceived under such a grotesque deception. I sunk to the floor, my breath ragged, hugging my knees, trying to hold myself together.
When the storm of tears subsided, a cold, clear resolve settled in its place. My hand, still trembling, typed a response to Kaleigh.
`Enjoy your victory party, Kaleigh. You can have Jacob. But you will never, ever have my child.` Send.
Almost instantly, my phone rang. Jacob. I stared at the screen, the name a toxic brand. I let it ring, then, with a decisive swipe, I blocked his number. Then Kaleigh' s. No more. No more poison. The silence that followed was a balm, a fragile peace I desperately needed. I took a deep, shaky breath, trying to calm my rapidly beating heart.
The next call I made was to a moving company. "I need to move my belongings," I told them, my voice firm despite the underlying tremor. "Immediately."
I walked through the apartment, picking up the few things that truly mattered. My architecture books, worn at the edges from years of study and practice. A small, framed photo of my mother, her kind eyes smiling at me. My sketchbooks, filled with designs that were uniquely mine, untainted by Jacob's influence. I packed only the essentials, the things that defined Aurelia Flynn, not Aurelia Dickerson.
The expensive gowns, the designer handbags, the diamond jewelry Jacob had given me-they lay untouched. They were tokens of a life that was never truly mine, relics of a false identity. I didn't want them. They felt heavy, suffocating.
On my dressing table, glinting under the pale morning light, sat my wedding ring. A thick platinum band, studded with diamonds. It had felt so heavy on my finger for ten years, a constant reminder of a promise that was never kept. Now, it felt like a shackle. I picked it up, cold and inert in my palm, and deliberately placed it on the marble countertop. It was a final, symbolic farewell to a love that had never existed.
The movers arrived a few hours later. They efficiently packed the boxes I had prepared. As the last box left the apartment, I took one final look around the space. It had been Jacob's idea to move into this grand apartment after our wedding, a penthouse with panoramic city views. I had tried to make it a home, but it had always felt like a showroom, cold and impersonal. Now, it was just an empty shell, a gilded cage I was finally escaping.
A profound sense of liberation washed over me, a breath of fresh air after years of suffocation. The weight of Jacob' s presence, his expectations, his lies, lifted from my shoulders. I was free. Free to breathe, free to be.
My new apartment was smaller, cozier, on the outskirts of the city. It had a tiny balcony overlooking a charming park. It wasn't opulent, but it was mine. It felt safe, a cocoon where I could finally heal and prepare for the arrival of my child.
I settled into a quiet routine, finding solace in the mundane. Long walks in the park, designing small, freelance projects from my laptop, reading books to my growing belly. The world outside Jacob's influence felt calmer, simpler, more real.
Then, a week later, another text message from an unregistered number. My heart pounded again, a familiar fear.
`Aurelia, you MUST answer my calls. Kaleigh is devastated. She loves that child. You can't just run away. That baby is ours. Don't you dare do anything foolish.`
Jacob. His words, delivered through the impersonal screen, were still laced with control, with an unsettling possessiveness over a child he saw as an extension of Kaleigh, not me. He was still seeing me as a vessel, a tool. The bitterness was a familiar taste in my mouth.
I deleted the message without a second thought. Then I blocked the number. The silence, this time, was absolute. A fragile shield, but a shield nonetheless. I would protect my child. And I would protect myself. I was done being a pawn in their twisted game.
Aurelia POV:
The sterile scent of disinfectant clung to the air in the doctor' s office. I lay on the examination table, my swollen belly exposed, the rhythmic thump-thump of my baby' s heartbeat echoing through the room from the ultrasound machine. This was my last prenatal check-up, just weeks before my due date.
"Everything looks perfect, Aurelia," Dr. Lee said, her voice warm and reassuring. Her finger traced a tiny leg on the screen. "Your baby is strong, healthy. A fighter, just like their mother." She smiled, but I couldn't return it. A knot of dread tightened in my stomach.
"Dr. Lee," I began, my voice barely a whisper, "If a woman... if she were to terminate a pregnancy this late, what would... what would be the impact on the baby?" The words tasted like ash, a confession of a desperate thought that still haunted the edges of my mind. The abortion appointment I'd canceled, the one born of pure despair, still felt like a looming shadow.
Dr. Lee paused, her smile fading. She looked at me, her gaze gentle but firm. "Aurelia, at this stage, it's not a 'termination.' It's an induced labor. The baby is fully formed, viable. They would be born, simply premature. It would be a living child, Aurelia." Her words hung in the air, weighted with unspoken meaning. "And this baby, yours, is particularly robust. They have a strong will to live."
My breath hitched. A living child. The thought was a sharp, agonizing stab to my heart. How could I even consider such a thing, after feeling those tiny kicks, after seeing that strong heartbeat? The desperation that had driven me to consider it felt like a monstrous part of myself, a dark shadow I was trying to escape. The moral dilemma ripped through me, tearing at the edges of my already frayed sanity. My baby deserved life, love, protection. Not to be erased to solve my problems.
As I walked out of the clinic, my mind a turbulent storm of guilt and protective rage, a familiar figure materialized from behind a parked car. My blood ran cold. Jacob.
"Aurelia!" His voice, usually so controlled, was raw, desperate. He lunged forward, his hand reaching for my arm.
I recoiled, my heart hammering against my ribs. "Don't touch me!" I hissed, clutching my belly protectively. My voice was low, laced with venom. "What are you doing here?"
"I followed you," he admitted, his eyes wild. "I saw your car. I know you're still pregnant. Thank God. You didn't do anything foolish." He tried to pull me towards his waiting car, a sleek black sedan. "We need to talk. We need to go home."
My stomach clenched. "Home? Jacob, I don't have a home with you. And I'm certainly not going anywhere with you." I dug my heels in, resisting his pull. "Do you have any idea what you've done? What kind of man are you?"
He sighed, his grip tightening. "This again? The postnup? It was a legal maneuver, Aurelia. A strategy to protect my assets from potential business risks. Kaleigh's name being on it was a technicality. You're blowing this out of proportion." His dismissiveness infuriated me. He still saw me as irrational, emotional, incapable of understanding his "complexities."
"A technicality?" I scoffed, a bitter laugh escaping my lips. "A technicality that would have left me destitute, Jacob! While billions floated into Kaleigh's accounts? Was it also a technicality that you spent my entire pregnancy whispering sweet nothings in Kaleigh's ear? Was it a technicality that you were sleeping in her bed, while I was alone, day after day, week after week?" My voice rose, raw with years of suppressed anger. "Was it a technicality that you dismissed my calls, ignored my needs, while you were building a new life with her? I saw the texts, Jacob. I heard the voice note. I saw the pictures!"
His desperate face twisted in surprise. "You... you saw them?" His grip loosened, his eyes wide. He hadn't expected me to know. He hadn't expected me to fight back.
"I wasn't blind, Jacob. Just a fool," I retorted, tears pricking my eyes. "I chose to believe your lies, your convenient excuses. I chose to see you as the man I loved, not the calculating monster you truly are. But no more. I'm awake now. Wide awake." My eyes, I knew, were burning with a cold fury.
He actually looked... ashamed. A flicker of remorse crossed his face, quickly replaced by a desperate plea. "Aurelia, I... I made mistakes. Terrible mistakes. But our child... this changes everything. We can fix this. Please. Come home." He looked at my belly, a strange mixture of longing and fear in his eyes.
"This child changes nothing for us, Jacob," I said, my voice firm and resolute. "I am having this baby. But this baby will have nothing to do with you or your corrupted world. You forfeited that right the moment you put Kaleigh's name on that agreement, the moment you betrayed every promise you ever made."
I shoved him away, his hands dropping from my arm. "This child is mine. And you will never touch them." With that, I turned and walked away, not looking back, my heart pounding with a fierce, protective resolve. He didn't follow.
For the next few days, I acted swiftly. I changed my phone number, deleted all my social media accounts, and instructed Ms. Davies to cease all contact with Jacob' s legal team. I wanted to disappear, to sever every last tie to the man who had systematically destroyed my life.
Ms. Davies called me three days later, her voice tight with concern. "Aurelia, Jacob has refused to sign the divorce papers. He's contesting everything. He says he wants you back."
My blood ran cold. "He wants the baby, Ms. Davies. Not me."
"He's claiming parental rights, Aurelia," she confirmed, her voice grim. "He's threatening to fight for full custody once the baby is born. Given his influence, his wealth... a protracted legal battle could be devastating. He has unlimited resources."
My stomach clenched. Jacob's power was immense. He could crush me, politically, financially, socially. He could drag my name through the mud, paint me as an unfit mother. The thought of him taking my child, raising them in that toxic environment, with Kaleigh as a surrogate mother figure, sent a shiver of pure terror down my spine.
"How long would a custody battle take?" I asked, my voice barely a whisper. The baby was due any day.
"Months. Potentially years," Ms. Davies replied, her voice filled with sympathy. "He could easily drag this out. And during that time, he could leverage his influence, make your life a living hell."
Years. I couldn't wait years. My baby would be born into this war. This child, my only hope, my only joy, would be a pawn in Jacob's twisted game. The thought was unbearable. He would use my child, sculpt them into Kaleigh's image, complete his perfect, perverse family with his true love. I pictured my innocent baby, a substitute, a replacement, growing up without knowing their true mother, raised by the woman who had orchestrated my downfall. It was a nightmare.
No. I wouldn't let him win. I wouldn't let him touch my child. I would fight, but not on his terms. My resolve hardened, clear and cold. I would make him agree to the divorce. I would make him let go. But I couldn't do it through legal channels. I needed a different plan. A desperate plan.
A plan that would make me disappear entirely. And take my child with me.
Aurelia POV:
The doorbell chimed, a cheerful sound that felt profoundly out of place in my current state of anxiety. My heart leaped into my throat. I hadn't ordered anything, I wasn't expecting anyone. My hand instinctively went to my belly, a protective gesture. I peered through the peephole.
Kaleigh.
She stood there, radiating an artificial innocence. Her hair, a perfect cascade of golden curls, framed a face carefully devoid of makeup, giving her an angelic, fragile look. She clutched a thermal food container, a sickly sweet smile plastered on her lips. She looked like a benevolent angel, ready to offer comfort. But I knew the viper beneath the veil.
I opened the door only a crack, leaving the safety chain on. "What do you want, Kaleigh?" My voice was flat, devoid of welcome.
"Aurelia, darling! I was so worried about you!" Her voice was a theatrical purr, dripping with false concern. She tried to push the food container through the gap. "Jacob told me you weren't eating properly. I made you some homemade chicken soup. It's so nourishing for the baby." Her eyes darted past me, trying to catch a glimpse of the apartment.
I pushed the container back, firmly. "I don't want your soup, Kaleigh. And I don't want you here. Leave."
Her perfect pout wavered for a split second, a flash of irritation replacing the saccharine sweetness. Then she regained her composure, her eyes welling up with perfectly timed tears. "Aurelia, how can you be so cruel? I'm just trying to help. We're sisters, after all. And this baby... it's Jacob's, our family's. We're all so worried."
"You lost the right to call yourself my sister a long time ago," I snapped, my patience wearing thin. "And Jacob's family? That's rich. I'm divorcing Jacob."
A flicker of triumph, swift and almost imperceptible, crossed her face before she rearranged her features into a mask of feigned sadness. "Oh, Aurelia. I know you're upset. Jacob is so distraught. He just wants what's best for everyone. Especially the baby." Her voice dropped to a conspiratorial whisper. "He really wants you to have this baby, you know. He's so excited to be a father."
My head snapped up. My eyes, narrowed and sharp, fixed on hers. "He wants me to have this baby?" The words were a dangerous whisper. "Why? So you can play mother? Is that it, Kaleigh? Do you want to raise my child?"
Her fragile facade cracked, just a little. She stammered, her eyes darting away. "N-no, of course not! How could you even think that? It's just... the baby. It deserves a family. A complete family. It's not the baby's fault you two can't work things out." She wrung her hands, a picture of distressed innocence. "And Jacob... he misses having children around. I mean, children. He really just wants to experience parenthood." She trailed off, her gaze dropping to my belly.
Then she whispered, her voice barely audible, "And you know... I can't. I can't give him that. My... my body won't let me."
The words hung in the air, heavy and poisonous. I can't give him that.
The pieces clicked into place, forming a monstrous, horrifying picture. The secret postnup, the asset transfers, Kaleigh's constant presence in Jacob's life, his strange obsession with having a child now, after years of indifference. The way he had dismissed me, the vessel, while coveting the product. The truth was a physical blow, worse than any punch.
I wasn't just a stand-in wife. I was a surrogate. A breeding machine. He wanted my child, not for us, but for them. For Jacob and Kaleigh, to complete their twisted fantasy of a perfect family. I was nothing more than a convenient, fertile uterus, a means to an end for a child he intended to mold into Kaleigh's image, the child she couldn't bear herself.
A guttural sound escaped me, a mix of disbelief, rage, and profound disgust. "You want my baby?" I spat, my voice shaking with venom. "You want to raise my child for Jacob, because you can't have one? Is that what this is? Is that why he married me? Because I look enough like you to fool him, and I can give you the child you're incapable of carrying?"
The sheer, grotesque absurdity of it all hit me with such force that my vision swam. My stomach lurched, my gorge rising. I felt a primal scream building in my chest, a desperate need to cleanse myself of the sickening truth.
Without thinking, my hand shot out. I snatched the thermal food container from Kaleigh's trembling hand. The ceramic felt cold, heavy. With a furious roar, fueled by years of betrayal and this ultimate, sickening revelation, I hurled it. It flew past her head, missing by inches, smashing against the wall of the hallway with a sickening wet crash. Chicken soup, once intended as a gesture of false kindness, splattered across the pristine white paint, leaving a grotesque, greasy stain.
Kaleigh shrieked, a high-pitched, genuine sound of terror. She stumbled back, clutching her chest, her carefully constructed facade completely shattered. Her eyes, wide with fear, stared at me, no longer seeing a gentle victim, but a woman pushed to the brink.
"Get out!" I screamed, my voice raw, hoarse. "Get out of my sight! Get out of my life, you manipulative, disgusting snake! And never, never come near my child again!" I slammed the door, the flimsy chain rattling, cutting her off midscream.
On the other side of the door, I heard her furious, venomous voice. "You'll regret this, Aurelia! You won't win! You will have this baby, and Jacob will make sure we get it!" She hammered on the door once, twice, then her footsteps retreated rapidly.
I slid down the door, my legs giving out, collapsing onto the floor. My body shook violently, my breath coming in ragged gasps. Fear, cold and insidious, wrapped its tendrils around my heart. They wouldn't let me go. They wouldn't let my child go. Jacob's power, his wealth, his relentless determination to get what he wanted-it was a terrifying force. Kaleigh, with her twisted desires and manipulative cunning, was just as dangerous.
They wanted my baby. Not our baby, not my baby, but their baby. A living, breathing doll to complete their grotesque family portrait.
No. I wouldn't let them. I wouldn't. This child, this innocent life stirring within me, was mine. My only hope, my only future, the only pure thing left in a world tainted by lies. I would protect them, fiercely, with every fiber of my being. I placed my hands on my swollen belly, feeling a soft flutter, a gentle reminder of the life I carried.
"It's just you and me, little one," I whispered, tears streaming down my face. "Just you and me. And I promise, they will never, ever get you."
A wild, desperate thought sparked in my mind, a terrifying, exhilarating idea born of pure desperation. If they wanted my child so badly, if they believed this baby was theirs... what if the baby, and I, simply ceased to exist? What if we vanished without a trace, leaving them with nothing but echoes and unanswered questions? It was insane. It was dangerous. But it was the only way. The only way to truly escape, to truly protect my child.